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  • Contributors

RICHARD BARLOW received his Ph.D. degree from Queen's University Belfast. He is now an assistant professor at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore where he teaches courses on Ulysses, Irish Literature, Scottish Literature, and Modernism. His work has appeared in publications such as the James Joyce Quarterly, Philosophy and Literature, and The Irish Times. He is the author of a monograph entitled The Celtic Unconscious: Joyce and Scottish Culture.

ROBERT BERRY is the Philadelphia-based cartoonist behind ULYSSES "seen," the ambitious project aimed at fully adapting Joyce's novel into a visual learning platform. His artworks have been shown in Bloomsday celebrations all over the world where they have helped to unite Joyce devotees both new and learned. He teaches at the University of Pennsylvania and occasionally gets the chance to make pretty pictures.

STEPHANIE BOLAND recently completed her doctorate on modernism and non-fiction at the University of Exeter. She has previously written for the James Joyce Quarterly on the Frank Budgen papers at the Zurich James Joyce Foundation.

CHRISTOPHER DEVAULT is Associate Professor of English at Mount Mercy University. He is the author of Joyce's Love Stories.

TIANA M. FISCHER is an Irish-Re-search-Council-funded doctoral researcher in English at the National University of Ireland, Galway. Her Ph.D. thesis investigates modernist revisionary aesthetics and theories of mediation in sui generis artworks by James Joyce, W. B. Yeats, and Ezra Pound.

LUKE GIBBONS has taught as Professor of Irish Studies at Maynooth University and at the University of Notre Dame, U.S.A. His most recent publications include Joyce's Ghosts: Ireland, Modernism and Memory; Charles O'Conor: His Life and Works, co-edited with Kieran O'Conor; and Limits of the Visible: Representing the Great Hunger.

PATRICK HERALD earned his Ph.D. degree at the University of Kentucky, where he completed a dissertation on recent British and postcolonial fiction. In his research, he broadly focuses on the role of expert knowledge: how it is codified in disciplines, what the implications are when specialist knowledge is used by decision-makers but is beyond the reach of laypersons, and how recent authors deploy expertise in their fiction and public personae. His current project examines these issues in terms of the novelists Ian McEwan, Zadie Smith, and Abdulrazak Gurnah. Herald is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at Emory University.

YOUNGHEE KHO received her Ph.D. degree from the University of Tulsa and is a lecturer at Korea [End Page 214] University. Her most recent publications are "Moving Beyond the Famine: Joyce, Emigration, and Imagining a New Community in 'Penelope'" in Joyce Studies Annual and "Performative Sherlock Holmes: Male Direction and Female Digression in 'A Scandal in Bohemia'" in ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews. She has also published several articles in Korean journals. A forthcoming essay is entitled "Humans in the Food Economy: The Famine, Biopower, and Beckett's Imagination of Post-Colonial State in Watt" in English Studies.

RAY LEONARD is a Ph.D. candidate at Rutgers University. His work has also appeared in the Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry.

KATIE LOGAN is Assistant Professor of Focused Inquiry at Virginia Commonwealth University. Her research focuses on intersections between contemporary Arabic, Arab-Anglophone, and modern British literature with particular interest in women's writing, memory studies, and migration. Her current book project is entitled Geographies of Memory: Nostalgia, Loss, and Forgetting in Transnational Women's Writing, and recent work has appeared in Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

MARC A. MAMIGONIAN is the Director of Academic Affairs of the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR). He is the editor of the volume The Armenians of New England and the co-editor of annotated editions of James Joyce's novels A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (with John N. Turner) and Ulysses (with John N. Turner and Sam Slote). His work has appeared in the James Joyce Quarterly, Genocide Studies International, the Armenian Review, and the Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies, as well as in the Boston Book Review, Armenian Weekly, Armenian Mirror-Spectator, Institute for the Study of Genocide Newsletter, and other...

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